Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Controlled Burn

I had mentioned in one of my earlier post that when we got the opportunity to do some controlled burning we would.  Well, we finally have gotten that chance.   The wind has been light, giving us perfect conditions to work.  We have around 3 years of brush and debris so it is no small task. With the rain we are getting tonight, we should be able to continue burning safely for the next few days.

Burning brush in the pit that we dug out


Water cart for safety and control

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Roundup Application On Collars

About 3 weeks ago I mentioned in one of my blogs that we would be doing an application of Roundup in our collars. Roundup is a great tool in the winter because it is safe to spray on our dormant bermudagrass. It also doesn't translocate in the soil, which means we can safely apply it right up next to our greens and not worry about injury to our bentgrass. We still use a drift board to cover ourselves against any drift we might get from the wind. Last Thursday the wind was light which made it a perfect day to do our application. The Roundup will take care of any weeds that we have like poa annua, clover, etc. With the help of one of my staff members, we completed this job in just under 3 hours. The sprayer we used was my personal sprayer that has covered nozzles which also helps us against any wind and drift we might get.  We made 2 passes around every green which will give us a 5 to 6 foot buffer for our Roundup and pre-emerge application next month.

One of our target weeds Poa Annua


Applicaton process with drift board in use


Finished application around #9 Green

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Winter Project

On the golf course when we aren't working on equipment in the winter we are always trying to find ways to improve things around the shop.  Last year we mainly worked on cleaning the shop. It was my first winter here at SCC and we had alot of organizing to do.  This year we decided to renovate our storage area for our irrigation parts.  We were having problems with the bins not being big enough to hold everything we had, they also didn't have a back on them so we were constantly having parts fall from one level to another, making it hard to stay organized. Our new storage area has bigger bins, backs on all of them, a work bench for valve and sprinkler head repair, and 2 areas to store bigger parts, pumps, etc.  I wish I could take the credit for the design, but it was my assistant Craig that came up with that. 

Old storage area for irrigation


My assistant Craig taking a measurement


New storage for irrigation


Storage area with tool bench






Saturday, January 14, 2012

Week of Jan 16-20

We have a busy week coming up here at SCC.  This coming week we will be working on an irrigation leak on #6, we are in the process of clearing some brush and cedars on #15 and if the weather allows us to we will start burning our brush pile over on #17. Last Thursday we met with the fire cheif and made sure that our process to burn was approved with him. We dug a pit so our debris would be contained and burn quicker. We are ready to go with a burn permit, we just need the wind to be below 20 mph.  If you see any smoke this week on the east side of the property, don't be alarmed. It will be my staff and I trying to get some things cleaned up.

This is the pit that we made for our burn.


Pile of brush and debris

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Winter Equipment Maintenance

On a golf course the winter is a good time to do some needed repair on some of our equipment. Two weeks ago we discovered that we had a couple of hydraulic leaks on our backhoe when we were using it on the golf course.  The leaks were coming from 2 hydraulic cylinders on the back arm on the machine.  One of the cylinders runs the bucket and the other runs the left side of the arm to move it back and forth.  My assistant and I took the cylinders off the machine and took them to get them repaired.  It took OCT equipment 4 days to get them fixed and we got the backhoe going again on Monday.  Below are some before and after pictures of the leaking cylinders.

Before look of cylinder leaking


Look at cylinder after repair


Second cylinder leak before repair


Second cylinder leak after repair


My assistant Craig putting the final touches on one of our repairs






Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Poa Annua Control

Over the last 3-4 weeks you may have seen myself or my assistant Craig on a sprayer around the golf course.  What were we doing?  Trying to get some control over poa annua, also known as annual bluegrass.  Poa is a winter annual that will germinate in the fall, grow all winter long, flowers profusley in the spring and then later dies when temperatures soar over the summer.  Due to the moisture we have recieved this fall and the warmer than normal temperatures, we have had an abundance of poa start to come up on the course.  We made two applications over the last 3-4 weeks and really have gotten some great control out of a product called Reward.  Reward is a perfect herbicide for this time of year because you get quick control and it can only be sprayed on dormant bermudagrass.  Reward cannot be sprayed close to our greens because it will translocate through the soil and be harmful to our bentgrass greens.  We will make a roundup application later this month and in Feburary that will take care of that.  Below are some before and after pictures showing some of the control that we have recieved.

Before picture of #16 Tee, green poa on dormant bermudagrass


Application of Reward being made on Friday 12-30-11


Picture of #16 Tee after application on Tuesday 1-3-12